File 78 - FBI Found a Painting of Bill Clinton in a Blue Dress at Epstein's Mansion
15.2.2026 | 25 Min.
When FBI agents executed a search warrant at 9 East 71st Street in July 2019, they cataloged the contents room by room. Among the items they found: a painting of Bill Clinton wearing a blue dress and red heels, hanging in a hallway of a $77 million townhouse. It was one piece in an art collection spread across every Epstein property - Manhattan, Palm Beach, New Mexico, and the Virgin Islands. This episode follows the art collection through bail hearings where prosecutors disclosed $559 million in assets including art, cash, and diamonds across multiple jurisdictions, through estate probate filings that itemized art valuations at each residence, through EFTA financial records showing large cash movements that could facilitate art purchases without standard AML reporting. Before 2020, the art market had virtually no anti-money laundering regulations - dealers were not required to file suspicious activity reports, making art one of the last unregulated financial asset classes. Freeport storage facilities allowed high-value art to be held in tax-free zones indefinitely, with ownership transferring through private sales that left no public record. Sources for this episode are available at: https://epsteinfiles.fm/?episode=ep78 About The Epstein Files The Epstein Files is an AI-generated podcast analyzing the 3.5 million pages released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). All claims are grounded in primary source documents. New episodes are released regularly as additional documents are reviewed. Produced by Island Investigation
File 77 - Southern Trust: Epstein's $233M Bank Reported $200M Revenue With No Clients
14.2.2026 | 36 Min.
Southern Trust Company appears in Epstein's estate inventory valued at $233.6 million. Over five years, it reported $200 million in revenue. The USVI Attorney General investigated and asked: where did the money come from? Who were the customers? The answers were never clear. This episode follows the offshore banking network around Southern Trust - from USVI tax incentive structures and Economic Development Commission approvals, to Swiss private banking relationships and cross-border wire flows, to British Virgin Islands shell companies and entity layering, to JPMorgan's 134 Epstein-linked accounts processing $1.1 billion, to compliance failures where Suspicious Activity Reports were filed but risk reviews never escalated. The documents show how jurisdiction, banking structure, and weak AML controls operated together to move money across borders while reducing transparency and accountability. Sources for this episode are available at: https://epsteinfiles.fm/?episode=ep77 About The Epstein Files The Epstein Files is an AI-generated podcast analyzing the 3.5 million pages released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). All claims are grounded in primary source documents. New episodes are released regularly as additional documents are reviewed. Produced by Island Investigation
Episode 76 - The Corporate Boards That Gave Him Legitimacy
14.2.2026 | 28 Min.
A man who falsified his resume at Bear Stearns in 1976 ended up as Chairman of Financial Trust Company, member of the Trilateral Commission and CFR, Rockefeller University board member, and Harvard Visiting Fellow. This episode traces how Epstein manufactured corporate credentials through transitive legitimacy - from resume fraud to Wexner power of attorney to purchased board seats - and how the collapse triggered CEO resignations at L Brands, Apollo, Barclays, and MIT.
Episode 75 - The Charitable Foundations That Funded Him
13.2.2026 | 25 Min.
In 2003, Epstein pledges $30 million to Harvard. Only $6.5 million arrives - but it buys him an office on campus and 40+ visits after his conviction. This episode pulls apart three charitable foundations controlled by Epstein and his lawyers, the MIT cover-up where staff called him Voldemort, Leon Black s $158 million in payments, and the phantom philanthropy where 10 major institutions denied ever receiving his claimed donations.
File 74 - The Insurance Mystery Nobody Can Explain
13.2.2026 | 24 Min.
In November 2024, JPMorgan Chase files a lawsuit in New York Supreme Court against its own insurance companies - Liberty Mutual, Chubb, Federal Insurance, Westchester Fire. The bank had already paid $290 million to settle with nearly 200 Epstein victims, and now it wants its carriers to cover the tab. The insurers said no. Their argument: you do not get to facilitate a sex trafficking operation and then file a claim. This episode follows the insurance trail - the unprecedented coverage quagmire where professional liability excludes intentional misconduct and general liability requires an accident, Deutsche Bank's $150 million fine for KYC failures, the Victims Compensation Fund that paid $121 million from the estate with zero dollars from insurers, stigma damages that wiped $26 million off Epstein's assets, and Southern Country International - the offshore bank Epstein created in the USVI that never commenced normal operations. Sources for this episode are available at: https://epsteinfiles.fm/?episode=ep74 About The Epstein Files The Epstein Files is an AI-generated podcast analyzing the 3.5 million pages released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA). All claims are grounded in primary source documents. New episodes are released regularly as additional documents are reviewed. Produced by Island Investigation
The Epstein Files is the first AI-native documentary podcast to systematically analyze the Jeffrey Epstein case at scale. With over 3 million pages of DOJ documents, court records, flight logs, and public resources now available, traditional journalism simply cannot process this volume of information. AI can. This series leverages artificial intelligence at every layer of production. From custom-built architecture that ingests and cross-references millions of pages of evidence, to AI-generated audio that delivers findings in a consistent, accessible format, this project represents a new model for investigative journalism. What would take a newsroom years to analyze, AI can process in days, surfacing connections, patterns, and details that would otherwise remain buried in the sheer volume of data. Each episode draws directly from primary sources: unsealed court documents, FBI files, the black book, flight logs, victim depositions, and the DOJ's ongoing document releases. The AI architecture identifies relevant passages, cross-references names and dates across thousands of files, and synthesizes findings into episodes that make this information digestible for the public. The series covers Epstein's mysterious rise to wealth, his network of enablers, the properties where crimes occurred, the 2008 sweetheart deal, his death in federal custody, the Maxwell trial, and the unanswered questions that remain. This is not sensationalized content. It is documented fact, processed at scale, and presented with journalistic rigor. The goal is simple: make the public record accessible to the public. New episodes release as additional documents become available, with AI enabling rapid analysis and production that keeps pace with ongoing revelations. Our Standards AI enables scale, but journalistic standards guide the output. Every claim is tied to specific documents. The series clearly distinguishes between proven facts and allegations. Victim testimony is handled with dignity. Names that appear in documents are not accused of wrongdoing unless documents support such claims. This is documented fact, processed at scale, presented for the public.